In Re The Estate Of: Charles Robert Thornton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 25, 2015
Docket46337-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Estate Of: Charles Robert Thornton (In Re The Estate Of: Charles Robert Thornton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re The Estate Of: Charles Robert Thornton, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

W. ED F 06"4T OF APPEALS IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGT6MISM1411 L0I 5' DIVISION II 8: 45 IAT`I \ F V S In re the Estate of: No. 46337 -7 -II OTOIJ

CHARLES ROBERT THORNTON, EP y

Deceased.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

MELNICK, J. — Martin Thornton appeals from the trial court' s summary judgment

dismissal of his Trust and Estate Dispute Resolution Act ( TEDRA) petition which sought to

invalidate Charles ( Bob) Thornton' s 2010 will for undue influence and fraud in the inducement

and to establish a constructive trust over distributed nonprobate assets.' Because no material

factual dispute exists on any claim, we affirm the trial court. We also affirm the trial court' s

attorney fees award, but we decline to award fees to either party on appeal.

FACTS

Merry Heberlein and Bob were in a committed loving relationship beginning in March 2003 and on December 5, 2010, when Bob passed away at the age of 67. At the time of ending

Bob' s death, he and Heberlein lived together and jointly operated a real estate business. They

maintained many bank accounts as joint tenants with right of survivorship. They also designated

each other as the primary beneficiaries on their respective retirement accounts in 2007 and 2008.

In early October 2010, Bob visited his doctor to inquire about a cough that was getting

progressively worse. He also experienced a myriad of health issues including fatigue, afternoon

1 We will use first names throughout this opinion when necessary for clarity; we mean no disrespect. 46337 -7 -II

headaches, and shortness of breath. During the second week of October, Bob' s doctors advised

him he had a terminal illness. They estimated that he had a 5 percent chance of survival and a life

expectancy of 2 to 6 months.

Bob' s diagnosis prompted him to reexamine his estate plan and put his affairs in order.

Bob enlisted the help of longtime friends. Bob called his friend Sue Holbrook and asked her to

recommend an attorney to draft a new will for him. Sue recommended Desiree Hosannah. Bob

told Sue that he intended to take care of Heberlein in his new will. Bob also told Paul Henderson,

his friend and business associate, that he hired a lawyer to rewrite his will and that he needed to

put his affairs in order." Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 79. Bob asked Henderson to witness the

execution of the new will.

Bob and Heberlein met with Hosannah on the afternoon of October 18. Heberlein filled

out the initial consultation paperwork, which included general information such as Bob and

Heberlein' s contact information, their purpose for the meeting, and referral information. Both Bob

and Heberlein signed the document. The paperwork did not include any substantive information

about the proposed terms of Bob' s or Heberlein' s estate planning documents.

Over the course of the afternoon, Bob and Heberlein had joint and separate meetings with

Hosannah. In a private meeting, Bob told Hosannah that, in anticipation of an upcoming medical

procedure, he wanted his estate plan in place. He identified Heberlein as his primary beneficiary

and his sister, Doris Ellison, as his alternate beneficiary. When Hosannah inquired about his son,

Martin, Bob told her that he had " already given him all he is going to get" in the form of a house

given some years before. and that Martin was a " bad seed."' CP at 82. Bob also told Hosannah

2 In 1996, Bob conveyed title to his home to Martin. Martin contends that the conveyance was not a gift, but a purchase.

2 46337 -7 -II

that Martin had a criminal background and had brought drugs to a family function a few years ago;

therefore, Bob did not want to leave Martin anything in his estate plan. Bob told Hosannah that

he had already taken care of some assets by placing them in joint -ownership with Heberlein and

that he wanted the new will to address the remaining assets. According to Hosannah, Heberlein

did not instruct her as to the terms of Bob' s estate plan in any respect.

Bob and Heberlein executed their wills before leaving Hosannah' s office on October 18.

As requested, Bob' s friend, Henderson, signed Bob' s will as a witness. Bob' s 2010 will named

Heberlein as both the primary beneficiary of his entire estate and his personal representative. It

named his sister as his alternate beneficiary and alternative personal representative. Bob' s 2010

will revoked his 1988 will, which named Martin as Bob' s primary beneficiary.

After executing his new will, Bob continued to discuss his desire to provide for Heberlein.

In November, Bob told his longtime friend, Judy Johnson, that he had made a new will naming

Heberlein as his beneficiary and that he and Heberlein had consolidated their assets. When Bob

called his sister to tell her he had terminal cancer, he told her that he had prepared a new will

providing for Heberlein.

Bob and Heberlein registered as domestic partners, effective October 19, 2010. They filled

out the registration and had their signatures notarized. Bob then called his friend, Joe Holbrook,

and asked if he and Sue could file the domestic partner registration documents in Olympia. Bob

also told Joe that he wanted to make sure Heberlein was taken care of given his worsening medical

condition. According to Heberlein, she and Bob asked their good friends to file the registration

documents because they were busy attending Bob' s doctor appointments.

Bob continued to work as a real estate agent. During the month of October, he helped

Johnson and her husband sell their home. Bob handled the entire transaction, including the closing

3 46337 -7 -II

on November 22. Bob transitioned his work files to Henderson in anticipation of his cancer

treatment scheduled to begin on November 29. Henderson found Bob' s files to be well -organized.

On November 29, the hospital admitted Bob so he could start an aggressive treatment for

kidney cancer. Bob' s condition, worse than expected, resulted in the hospital discontinuing the

treatment. On December 2, Bob' s sister, a registered nurse, arrived from out- of-state to visit him

in the hospital. According to her, Bob was lucid and coherent. He suffered from shortness of

breath but could talk normally. He showed no signs of mental problems. On the afternoon of

December 4, Bob took a nap and never regained consciousness. He passed away the next day.

According to Bob' s treating physician, Bob took numerous inpatient medications while

hospitalized; however, prior to that time, he did not have prescriptions for any medications that

would alter his mental status or judgment.

Martin did not visit Bob-at the hospital. According to Heberlein, she contacted Martin and

asked him to visit Bob in the hospital, but Martin did not do so. According to Martin' s wife and

daughters, Heberlein was not forthcoming about Bob' s welfare and she blocked Martin and his

family from seeing Bob. Longtime friends of Bob and Martin' s, Guadalupe and Terry Cuevas,

corroborated Martin' s version that Heberlein would not allow them or Martin' s family to visit Bob

in the hospital during his final days.

Bob' s 2010 will was admitted to probate, and the court appointed Heberlein the personal

representative of the estate. Martin then filed a TEDRA petition to invalidate the 2010 will. He

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